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Clinical Trial
. 2005 Jun;58(1):9-16.
doi: 10.1016/j.bandc.2004.09.005. Epub 2004 Nov 18.

Chronic treatment with haloperidol induces deficits in working memory and feedback effects of interval timing

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Chronic treatment with haloperidol induces deficits in working memory and feedback effects of interval timing

Cindy Lustig et al. Brain Cogn. 2005 Jun.

Abstract

Normal participants (n=5) having no experience with antipsychotic drugs and medicated participants (n=5) with clinical experience with chronic low doses of haloperidol (3-10 mg/day for 2-4 months) in the treatment of neuroses were evaluated for the effects of inter-trial interval (ITI) feedback on a discrete-trials peak-interval timing procedure. Feedback was presented during the ITI in the form of a histogram showing the distribution of the responses participants made on the previous trial plotted on a relative time scale. As feedback concerning the accuracy and precision of a reproduced duration (e.g., 7- and 14-s visual signals) became more remote in time, reproduced intervals gradually lengthened in duration. This rightward horizontal shift in peak time increased as a function of the probability of feedback and was enhanced by chronic treatment with haloperidol in a manner that was proportional to the duration of the signal. Our data suggest a gradual change in the underlying representation of the signal duration as a function of the remoteness of ITI feedback that is dependent upon both changes in working memory and the speed of the internal clock used to time durations in the seconds-to-minutes range.

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